For less than $10 per student, per year, you can
put Money Savvy Kids in every classroom in your school.

Money Savvy Kids Basic Personal Finance Curriculum
Pricing

Curriculum Level/ Grade Level

Cost of Reusable Teacher Kits

Cost of Student Materials

First Year Cost For A Classroom
of 24 Students (1)

Subsequent Year Cost For A Classroom
of 24 Students (2)

Level PK (Pre-K or K)

$149.95

$21.95

$624.07

$474.12

Level A (K or 1st)

$149.95

$4.95

$312.81

$112.86

Level B (1st or 2nd) (3)

$149.95

$4.95

$312.81

$112.86

Level C (2nd or 3rd)

$149.95

$21.95

$624.07

$474.12

Level D (3rd or 4th)

$149.95

$6.95

$308.41

$158.46

Level E (4th or 5th)

$149.95

$6.95

$308.41

$158.46

(1) Student materials ordered in 24-packs
receive a discount
(2) Teacher Kit not included
(3) A kit containing Level A and Level B teacher materials and
a single puppet is available for $280

Cost Estimation Worksheet

Click the icon at left to download an Excel spreadsheet
that you can use to estimate your school's total costs
for implementing Money Savvy Kids, based on the number
of classrooms and number of students that you wish
to reach.

Prevent your students from stepping on financial
landmines as adults.

Financial landmines are everywhere in today's fast-paced
world. They range from escalating credit card debt to identity
theft to failure to save for retirement, to bankruptcy to divorce.
And the situation is getting worse. A Chapter Seven bankruptcy
filing used to be able to wipe out much or all of the debt for
someone whose life had spun out of control. Now with the new 2005
bankruptcy law, filings and the opportunity for debt relief are
limited. The hardest hit age groups will be those under 35.

These financial landmines can cause untold grief
that can last a lifetime. Just take a look at the numbers.

Based on current trends, five out of six of these kids
will make huge financial mistakes. . . unless they
get smart about money first.

Landmine Encountered

What
It Will Cost Each of Them

One
out of six will likely declare bankruptcy during their
lifetime.

At least $25,000 in legal fees and higher credit costs
once they are able to reestablish credit, not to mention
the untold hours of paperwork.

Two
out of six will likely divorce due to financial incompatibility
with their spouse.

$50,000
in legal fees and an inestimable emotional toll.

Three
of six will fail to save for retirement.

$500,000 to 1 million in lost savings.

Four
out of six will incur substantial ongoing credit card
finance charges.

$25,000
over 10 years.

The cost/benefit is compelling.

You teach them to read, write, add and subtract, but
there are other critical skills they need to compete in the real
world. They need to be financially literate. What if you could
supplement your math curriculum to make them smart about money
for less than $10 per year and less than $50 for their years in
elementary school? How could your district not afford to spend
so little to give so much in return?